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Mission Statement (and disclaimer)

* To inform, educate, inspire colleagues and general public by sharing my own experiences, observations, thoughts, and insights drawn from my life and career in medicine and surgery.

* To explore my life and surgical career, as my journey progresses.

* To pose questions, address controversies, frame debate and discussion about/around topics, events, and issues that touch medicine and surgery, and the physicians and surgeons, institutions, and people involved and affected.

This will mainly be framed in the context of personal essays, discussions, conversations, observations (albeit one-sided).

I speak only for myself, the thoughts and opinions are mine; if I quote or borrow from others, appropriate attribution will be made.The educational and other institutions, groups, and organizations I have been and continue to be involved with have not sanctioned or approved the content, my comments here should not and do not reflect their opinions or represent them in any way. Likewise, I do not deign to represent my peers and colleagues. With that said, I hope that I respect and honor them all here in this place.

Posts and the information shared should not be taken as medical or treatment advice; any concerns or problems should be discussed and evaluated with your own physician or health care provider.

Comments are welcome, but will be reviewed and approved before posting.

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I Look Like a Surgeon, and #ILookLikeASurgeon

“A good surgeon has the eye of an eagle, the heart of a lion, and the hand of a woman…”– 15th Century English Proverb

#ILookLikeASurgeon, operating

#ILookLikeASurgeon, a new hashtag on Twitter and the movement it has inspired, has resonated deeply with me.

I look like a Surgeon. There is so much more behind this seemingly simple statement of fact. I am not just stating that I have excelled and I have achieved and I am accomplished by being a surgeon. In saying I look like a surgeon, I am saying that it is normal for me to be a surgeon; that it is normal for me to be seen as a surgeon; that it is normal for me to command the respect and authority of a surgeon; and ultimately, that it is normal for others who look like me to aspire to be surgeons.

I look like a Woman. And in that statement, in the moment I am visualized, there is an instantaneous assessment, judgement, and conclusion about who I am and what I am capable of. Even more importantly, about what I am not capable of. It dictates where I can go, what I can wear, what I can say, and even how I say it, especially if I value personal safety.

With the genesis and appearance of the hashtag #ILookLikeASurgeon, I have felt an overwhelming sense of connection and community, validation and gratitude. #ILookLikeASurgeon has spread across Twitter and the Internet, crossing continents and spanning the globe. #ILookLikeASurgeon has inspired surgeons and others, and is garnering the attention and support of media outlets, our medical and surgical organizations, and our healthcare institutions.

Yet this very public, open, and global movement has affected me in a very personal way, touching me at my very core. #ILookLikeASurgeonrepresents many things to me. It says “I am here,” “See me.” It is me claiming my profession, the profession that I and all surgeons work and sacrifice so very hard to attain and maintain. Finally, as a physician and especially as a surgeon, my profession is not merely a job or a career, but a fundamental part of who I am. No matter where I may go or what I may do, being a physician and being a surgeon is part of who I am. In a very palpable and real way for me, with #ILookLikeASurgeon I am claiming myself as well; this is me.

To many people (too many people), the same individual who declares “I am a Surgeon” can not be the same individual who says “I am a Woman.” #ILookLikeASurgeon challenges that. There is a fairly well-known riddle, a real brain-teaser, that continues to stump people. It goes: A father and son were out driving in a car on a stormy night, and were involved in a serious accident. The father was killed instantly, and the seriously injured boy was brought to the hospital, in need of emergency surgery. The surgeon entered the room, took one look at the young patient, and declared, “I cannot operate on this boy. He is my son.” From here, the listener must figure out why the surgeon can’t operate. This riddle is not new; it was not new when I first heard it nearly 40 years ago. Yet it remains quite the stumper to this day. (And I will let you, dear reader, work it out for yourself if you haven’t already heard it before). The passion and the point behind #ILookLikeASurgeon seeks to turn the brain-teaser into a no-brainer.

#ILookLikeASurgeon speaks to diversity extending beyond gender, and that too is powerful. But for women, who make up more that half of the world around us, more than half of college and medical students, it shows that we are also present in this space traditionally dominated by men, alongside them. It calls on us to normalize diversity, even as we strive to normalize the numbers to reflect the world around us. It calls on us to appreciate that our differences are only different, not better or worse.

American College of Surgeons President, Andy Warshaw, MD, FACS was quoted in a Tweet, saying, “We all look alike in the O.R.; It’s quality, not gender, that counts.” #ILookLikeASurgeon and the community and momentum it has inspired gives me hope that both in and out of the O.R. we will be seen as Surgeons, and that our work and not our gender will speak for us.

Newly inducted Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, October 2000